← Back to context Comment by cestith 1 month ago The dnf, deb, or pacman tools could point to a repo where the packages have paid activation. 2 comments cestith Reply akdev1l 1 month ago Companies can already do that. This is how redhat works in its entirety.This has nothing to do with the base distribution cestith 20 days ago I don’t remember ever having to activate a piece of RedHat code after downloading it. I do remember paying a subscription to have authentication to particular repos. It’s been a while, though.
akdev1l 1 month ago Companies can already do that. This is how redhat works in its entirety.This has nothing to do with the base distribution cestith 20 days ago I don’t remember ever having to activate a piece of RedHat code after downloading it. I do remember paying a subscription to have authentication to particular repos. It’s been a while, though.
cestith 20 days ago I don’t remember ever having to activate a piece of RedHat code after downloading it. I do remember paying a subscription to have authentication to particular repos. It’s been a while, though.
Companies can already do that. This is how redhat works in its entirety.
This has nothing to do with the base distribution
I don’t remember ever having to activate a piece of RedHat code after downloading it. I do remember paying a subscription to have authentication to particular repos. It’s been a while, though.